Recent comments in /f/nottheonion

kevinds t1_j6uu7no wrote

> Failing to take 10 hours off in a day

> Exceeding 13 hours driving time without eight hours off

> Driving after 14 hours on duty without eight hours off

> Driving after 16 hours since last break without eight hours off

Being that he was pulled over twice, and given tickets both times, I'm pretty sure only two of these are valid.

Amung some of the other ones that are duplicates.

−2

wyrrk t1_j6ut6x4 wrote

technological change will always [disproportionately] benefit the people who own it, and they own it not because they built it, worked the machines that drove it, but because [all too often in late capitalism] they simply purchased it. thus the money, power, and influence continues to trickle upwards while the peasants [you and me] squawk about their tesla steering wheel falling off or believing they beat the system because they used chatgpt to write their homework.

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UnoriginallyGeneric OP t1_j6ulftm wrote

Since you asked...from another article on this:

Careless driving (three counts)

 Driver failing to surrender licence (three counts)

 Failing to surrender inspection schedule (two counts)

 Failing to enter defect in daily inspection report (two counts)

 Improperly driving a commercial motor vehicle with a minor defect in it

 Unnecessary slow driving (two counts)

 Failing to maintain daily log (two counts)

 Failing to take 10 hours off in a day

 Exceeding 13 hours driving time without eight hours off

 Driving after 14 hours on duty without eight hours off

 Driving after 16 hours since last break without eight hours off

 Failing to surrender daily log

 Driver in possession of more that one daily log

 Failing to keep record of duty status

 Failing to manually input information into ELD

 Entering inaccurate information in record 

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VonSauerkraut90 t1_j6uhi80 wrote

I don't doubt one day there will be AI lawyers but when I think about it I can't help but think about those crazy sovereign citizen folks. They seem to have this mental doctrine that if they just say the right combination of words and legal mumbo jumbo that the law somehow doesn't apply to them. If that idea has any merit to it, it will be an AI lawyer that somehow manages it.

What a time to be alive...

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